What was advertised in a revolutionary American newspaper 250 years ago today?

“Proposing to furnish the public with a News-Paper of Intelligence every THURSDAY.”
It was the third newspaper established in New England in just over a week. Robert L. Fowle distributed the first of the “occasional HAND-BILLS” that became the New Hampshire Gazette in Exeter on May 22, 1776. Three days later, Benjamin Dearborn published the first issue of the Freeman’s Journal in Portsmouth. Finally, on May 30, John Gill presented the Continental Journal to readers in Boston and beyond. Daniel Fowle had suspended his New-Hampshire Gazette in January or February, leaving the colony without any newspaper, so readers likely welcomed the new publications that gave them easier access to news and editorials about current events and forums for disseminating advertising than depending on newspapers from Massachusetts. After the battles at Lexington and Concord in April 1775, some printers in Boston discontinued or suspended their newspapers and others moved their newspapers to other towns. That included Benjamin Edes and John Gill, the printers of the Boston-Gazette. They dissolved their partnership and Edes printed the newspaper in Watertown during the siege of Boston and continued there for many months after British forces evacuated Boston. Only recently had Samuel Hall moved the New-England Chronicle from Cambridge into Boston. That made the Continental Journal only the second newspaper published in the city when Edes decided that he once again wished to “furnish the public with a News-Paper of Intelligence,” though he claimed that he “complied with the solicitation of his Friends” in pursuing the venture.
Printers often included an address to the public in their subscription proposals when they announced their plans to publish a newspaper or inserted a message to readers in the first issue. In his notice “TO THE PUBLIC,” Gill kept it simple by declaring that he “chooses to omit all pompous representations and promises … and only engages his utmost fidelity in collecting and printing the newest and best accounts of things that can be obtained.” With many years experiences printing the Boston-Gazette, he could rely on his reputation among prospective subscribers. Gill also outlined the “TERMS” for subscribers. The Continental Journal cost eight shilling per year, “one half to be paid at entrance, the other at the end of the first six months.” That was a common model among newspaper printers. He also advised, “Advertisements inserted at the customary price,” but did not specify that price. The printer did instruct advertisers that their notices were “to be paid on receiving them.” Like many other newspaper printers, he depended on advertising revenue. The printing office accepted advertisements until two o’clock on Wednesdays (and later only “in cases of necessity”), allowing time to set type and print the newspaper in time to distribute it to subscribers on Thursdays. The Continental Journal met with success, continuing throughout the war and closing in 1787 when Massachusetts imposed a tax on advertisements.























